SoNiK
lvl.1
Flight distance : 183248 ft
Italy
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In half an hour I've found something that could be the solution. Apple has several API to manage the camera and some of them are OIS related.
https://forums.developer.apple.com/thread/21694
https://developer.apple.com/libr ... sVideoStabilization
https://developer.apple.com/libr ... /tn2409/_index.html
There are 2 different ways Apple uses to stabilize a video...
Optical Image Stabilization During Video
On iPhone 6 Plus, optical image stabilization is only used to improve low light still image captures. On iPhone 6s Plus, optical image stabilization is used for low light still image captures as well as for stabilizing video for video data output or movie file output. All the rear-facing camera non-slow motion (60 fps or less) 16:9 video formats are optically stabilized on iPhone 6s Plus if you set AVCaptureConnection’s -preferredVideoStabilizationMode to something other than AVCaptureVideoStabilizationModeOff.
Expanded Cinematic Video Stabilization Support
In iOS 8, iPhone 6 and 6 Plus introduced an enhanced, dramatic video stabilization mode entitled “Cinematic”. Cinematic video stabilization was only supported on the rear-facing camera for 1080p30 and 1080p60 on these products. In iOS 9 we’ve expanded cinematic video stabilization support to 720p30 and 720p60, and supported devices to iPad Mini 4, iPad Pro, 6th gen iPod touch, iPhone 6 and 6 Plus, and iPhone 6s and 6s Plus. Cinematic video stabilization is the default video stabilization mode now (aka AVCaptureVideoStabilizationModeAuto) for 720p30, 720p60, 1080p30, and 1080p60 if your app is linked on or after iOS 9.0. See AVCaptureConnection’s preferredVideoStabilizationMode property.
I'm not a developer, but as you can see there are some suggestion to disable it. If that's the case, and if I'm not wrong, I'm curious to know what YOUR developers think of that, and if they can finally fix this in the DJI Go app.
I hope it'll work, and if that's the case, you have a debit with me )))
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